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Adolescent Females' Reproductive Health in Nigeria

A Study on the Legislation and Socio-Cultural Impediments to Abortion and against Female Circumcision

by Kingsley Ufuoma Omoyibo (Author)
©2003 Thesis XV, 194 Pages

Summary

The multi-cultural and multi-ethnic Nigerian society belongs to those developing countries where adolescents age 15-19 years, make up for the largest and growing age bracket of the total population. While reliable statistics on health issues are hardly available in Nigeria, it is estimated that over 60 percent of Nigerian women underwent some form of genital mutilation, which is responsible for a multitude of health problems later. Thus, this research explored issues of high political and social relevance in Nigeria as well as in international discussions from the World Health Organization to internationally operating non-governmental organizations of women's rights activists. The study gives a comprehensive discussion of cross-national studies on abortion and contraception, and on the effects of liberalizing the laws on it. The study adopted qualitative methodological techniques for the gathering of data by relying on focus group discussions and interviews of the target population-adolescents, as well as adults, orthodox and unorthodox medical experts. Finally, this empirical research provides a solid basis for further sociological research on the conditions of adolescent females' health and for practical steps in improving the Nigerian health care system.

Details

Pages
XV, 194
Year
2003
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631502846
Language
English
Keywords
Sociology Africa Jugendliche
Published
Frankfurt/M., Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2002. XV, 194 pp., num. fig. and tables

Biographical notes

Kingsley Ufuoma Omoyibo (Author)

The Author: Kingsley Ufuoma Omoyibo was born in 1966. He studied sociology and anthropology at the University of Benin/ Nigeria and the Freie Universität Berlin/ Germany. In 2002 he received his Ph.D. in sociology at the Freie Universität Berlin. From 1990 to 1991 he served in the National Youth Service Corps and gained experience in teaching and research at the department of sociology at the University of Jos, Nigeria. Since 1991 he is lecturer at the University of Benin, Nigeria. The author is associate member of the Nigerian Institute of Management (AMNIM) and member of the Nigerian Sociological and Anthropological Association (MNSAA).

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Title: Adolescent Females' Reproductive Health in Nigeria